Lateness, Asymmetricity, and Ecological Uncertainty in W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn Cover Image

Lateness, Asymmetricity, and Ecological Uncertainty in W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn
Lateness, Asymmetricity, and Ecological Uncertainty in W.G. Sebald’s The Rings of Saturn

Author(s): Daniel G. Spencer
Subject(s): Aesthetics, German Literature, Environmental and Energy policy
Published by: Transnational Press London
Keywords: Anthropocene; Aesthetics; Romanticism; Asymmetricity;

Summary/Abstract: This paper analyzes W.G. Sebald’s novel The Rings of Saturn as a literary exploration of ecology and post-historicity. By examining Sebald’s narrative through Timothy Morton’s revision of Hegelian art history as “Asymmetricity,” a prolonged period of post-human Romanticism, Sebald’s vision of history is positioned after the end of a sense of historical progress, a period of ruin and decline where nature begins to reclaim the landscape and history itself. This condition, I argue, is one instance in an ever-repeating cycle of historical and ecological “ends,” whose foil is the concept of ecological melancholy. Ultimately this analysis is a case study in how literature of the Anthropocene so preoccupied with the notion of the “end” encourages narrative estrangement from the world, an estrangement I seek to suture – though not entirely heal – through the recognition of a new historical teleology of engagement with the ecological melancholy’s potential for rebuilding.

  • Issue Year: 2/2023
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 67-76
  • Page Count: 10
  • Language: English